Failed the first attempt. Passed pretrip and maneuvers. Failed road primarily over accumulating too many points for not swinging my head on a swivel at intersections. When you’re in a manual, it’s mentally challenging. Focus has to be everywhere at once. Shifting, traffic to the sides, potential for stop lights, and aggressive drivers. Do this test in a big city, with more-than-average amount of aggressive drivers, even more of a challenge. A lot potential catch-22 situations. Not sure what kind of discussion I want to make out of this.
I felt good before my test, maybe a slight nervousness. Didn’t know exactly what to expect. Gonna give it another shot in two weeks. Just they don’t give these CDLs out like toys when you buy a happy meal. Being 95% isn’t good enough. Gotta be 110% with and a prayer that traffic signals and aggressive drivers don’t put you in impossible dilemmas.
CDL Test, not as easy as I expected
Discussion in 'Trucking Schools and CDL Training Forum' started by SmokeyBandit, Oct 21, 2022.
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I don’t wanna be that guy that says I was given an impossible instructor. He was fair but still strict. I’m sure how people drive on the job and on a CDL tests are two different things, and I don’t mean that in a negligent way. I’ve learned a lot from school and through this experience, hopefully enough to pass it the next go around. Even if you are well rehearsed and can drive normally and safely, you’ll lose a significant amount of respect from your instructor if you do not sound confident. Not that I didn’t feel confident, but he sensed a little bit of test anxiety that was in my voice.
My advice for the people that feel mostly good but not quite so sure, is display and talk with confidence from the get-go. Explain everything to your instructor into your decisions when put in those iffy situations.
Although overconfidence and the ability to drive like an honor student will not impress your instructor. Drive 5mph below the speed limit, anticipate any green light turning yellow and red. Completely stop a car length before a stop bar not at or near. You can still think you were driving proficiently, but they want to see you drive safely and cautiously, not like you think how a pro would drive.
All states are different, all test sites are different, all instructors are different. It’s the luck of the draw when it comes to a lenient vs strict instructor. Im not saying I was perfect, and maybe I did deserve to fail, but I really thought I did pretty darn good, until I got the news when we pulled back up to the test site. I just underestimated what some these instructors really want to see. Bottom line is drive with caution and defensively but not nervous.
Obviously you definitely don’t want to curb it or impede traffic. That should be the primary focus. But those things you think are petty, like mirror checks every 8 seconds, turning your head left-right-left at every intersection no matter red, green, or nothing, big or small, and stopping and slowing like grandma would at a stop, those really can add up against you as well.
Bottom line is take your time throughout this, and your more than likely not going to “impress” your instructor if that’s what you are trying for.aussiejosh Thanks this. -
I think most of us been nervous at the same moment ... no need to lie .. unless you superhero
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Don’t sweat it.
At least you got the pre-trip and maneuvers out of the way. You’ll be a lot less stressed when you go back for the road test.
Now Get’r done!Boondock, Sirscrapntruckalot, Siinman and 1 other person Thank this. -
Thanks. Indiana everything has to be redone on retest even for one failed portion.
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The people who make these claims have no proof that any of this stuff provides benefit, it just follow a psychological narrative, where they impose their will on you and it makes them feel powerful. It's like those old school driving instructors demanding you "keep your hands at 10 and 2!" and then one day people forgot about it because it never mattered at all.
Except they've gone to the next step where they're not just wasting your time, but demanding you drive in a way that's more dangerous to the people around you than not doing it. Swinging your head back and forth and back and forth over and over means you're no longer watching the road or your trailer.
I was reading something that said that since they implemented all this stuff, safety has statistically gotten worse. I wish I could find the link, it was in a pdf from the fmca or something.SmokeyBandit, Siinman and Coover Thank this.
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